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ICU Pharmacology

ICU Pharmacology. Sean Forsythe M.D. Assistant Professor of Medicine. ICU Pharmacology. Sedatives Analgesics Paralytics Pressors. Sedation.

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ICU Pharmacology

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  1. ICU Pharmacology Sean Forsythe M.D. Assistant Professor of Medicine

  2. ICU Pharmacology • Sedatives • Analgesics • Paralytics • Pressors

  3. Sedation • Relieve pain, decrease anxiety and agitation, provide amnesia, reduce patient-ventilator dysynchrony, decrease respiratory muscle oxygen consumption, facilitate nursing care. • May prolong mechanical ventilation and increase costs.

  4. Goals of Sedation • Old- Obtundation • New- Sleepy but arousable patient • Almost always a combination of anxiolytics and analgesics.

  5. Pain Anxiety Delirium Fear Sleep deprivation Patient-ventilator interactions Encephalopathy Withdrawal Depression ICU psychosis What is Agitation?

  6. Benzodiazepines • Act as sedative, hypnotic, amnestic, anticonvulsant, anxiolytic. • No analgesia. • Develop tolerance. • Synergistic effect with opiates. • Lipid soluble, metabolized in the liver, excreted in the urine. • Interact with erythro, propranolol, theo

  7. Benzodiazepines • Diazepam (Valium) • Repeated dosing leads to accumulation • Difficult to use in continuous infusion • Lorazepam (Ativan) • Slowest onset, longest acting • Metabolism not affected by liver disease • Midazolam (Versed) • Fast onset, short duration • Accumulates when given in infusion >48 hours.

  8. Benzodiazepines

  9. Propofol • Sedative, anesthetic, amnestic, anticonvulsant • Respiratory and CV depression • Highly lipid soluble • Rapid onset, short duration • Onset <1 min, peak 2 min, duration 4-8 min • Clearance not changed in liver or kidney disease.

  10. Propofol- Side effects • Unpredictable respiratory depression • Use only in mechanically ventilated patients • Hypotension • First described in post-op cardiac patients • Increased triglycerides • 1% solution of 10% intralipids • Daily tubing changes, dedicated port

  11. Butyrophenones • Haldol • Anti-psychotic tranquilizer • Slow onset (20 min) • Not approved for IV use, but is probably safe • No respiratory depression or hypotension. • Useful in agitated, delirious, psychotic patients • Side effects- QT prolongation, NMS, EPS

  12. Sedation studies • Propofol vs. midazolam • Similar times to sedation, faster wake-up time with propofol AJRCCM, 15:1012, 1996. • Nursing implemented sedation protocol •  duration of mech vent,  ICU stay, trach rate Crit Care Med 27:2609, 1999. • Daily interruption of sedation •  duration of mech vent,  ICU LOS, hosp LOS NEJM 342:1471, 2000.

  13. Monitoring Sedation • Many scoring systems, none are validated. • Ramsey • 1: Anxious, agitated, restless • 2: Cooperative, oriented, tranquil • 3: Responds to commands • 4: Asleep, brisk response to loud sounds • 5: Asleep, slow response to loud sounds • 6: No response

  14. Pain in the ICU • Pain leads to a stress response which causes: • Catabolism • Ileus • ADH release • Immune dysregulation • Hypercoaguable state • Increased myocardial workload • Ischemia

  15. Pain in the ICU • What causes pain in the ICU? • Lines • Tubes • Underlying illness • Interventions • Everything else

  16. Analgesics • Relieve Pain • Opioides • Non-opiodes • Can be given PRN or continuous infusion • PRN avoids over sedation, but also has peaks and valleys and is more labor intensive.

  17. Opiodes • Metabolized by the liver, excreted in the urine. • Morphine- Potential for histamine release and hypotension. • Fentanyl- Lipid soluble, 100X potency of MSO4, more rapid onset, no histamine release, expensive. • Demerol- Not a good analgesic, potential for abuse, hallucinations, metabolites build up and can lead to seizures.

  18. Opiodes • Adverse effects • Respiratory depression • Hypotension (sympatholysis, histamine release) • Decreased GI motility (peripheral effect) • Pruritis

  19. Non-opiodes • Ketamine • Analog of phencyclidine, sedative and anesthetic, dissociative anesthesia. • Hypertension, hypertonicity, hallucinations, nightmares. • Potent bronchodilator

  20. Non-opiodes • Ketorolac • NSAID • Limited efficacy (post-op ortho) • Synergistic with opiodes • No respiratory depression • Increased side effects in the critically ill • Renal failure, thrombocytopenia, gastritis

  21. Paralytics • Paralyze skeletal muscle at the neuromuscular junction. • They do not provide any analgesia or sedation. • Prevent examination of the CNS • Increase risks of DVT, pressure ulcers, nerve compression syndromes.

  22. Use of Paralytics • Intubation • Facilitation of mechanical ventilation • Preventing increases in ICP • Decreasing metabolic demands (shivering) • Decreasing lactic acidosis in tetanus, NMS.

  23. Paralytics • Depolarizing agents • Succinylcholine • Non-depolarizing agents • Pancuronium • Vecuronium • Atracurium

  24. Paralytics

  25. Paralytics

  26. Complications of Paralysis • Persistent neuromuscular blockade • Drug accumulation in critically ill patients • Renal failure and >48 hr infusions raise risk • In patients given neuromuscular blockers for >24 hours, there is a 5-10% incidence of prolonged muscle weakness (post-paralytic syndrome).

  27. Post-paralytic syndrome • Acute myopathy that persists after NMB is gone • Flaccid paralysis, decreased DTRs, normal sensation, increased CPKs. • May happen with any of the paralytics • Combining NMB with high dose steroids may raise the risk.

  28. Monitoring Paralysis • Observe for movement • Twitch monitoring, train of four, peripheral nerve stimulation.

  29. Shock • Hypoperfusion of multiple organ systems. • May present as tachycardia, tachypnea, altered mental status, decreased urine output, lactic acidosis. • Not all hypotension is shock and not all shock has hypotension.

  30. Shock • Rapidity of diagnosis is key. • The types: • Hypovolemic/ hemorrhagic • Cardiogenic • High output • Fluid bolus is almost always the correct initial therapy.

  31. Pressors • b1 myocardium-  contractility • b2 arterioles- vasodilation • b1 SA node-  chronotropy • b2 lungs- bronchodilation • a peripheral- vasoconstriction

  32. Pressors NEJM, 300:18, 1979.

  33. Dopamine (Intropin) • Renal (2-4 mcg/kg/min)- increase in mesenteric blood flow • b (5-10 mcg/kg/min)- modest positive ionotrope • a (10-20 mcg/kg/min) vasoconstriction

  34. Dopamine • “Renal dose” dopamine probably only transiently increases u/o without changing clearance. • There are better b and a agents. • Adverse effects- tachyarrhythmias .

  35. Dobutamine (Dobutrex) • Primarily b1, mild b2. • Dose dependent increase in stroke volume, accompanied by decreased filling pressures. • SVR may decrease, baroreceptor mediated in response to  SV. • BP may or may not change, depending on disease state.

  36. Dobutamine • Useful in right and left heart failure. • May be useful in septic shock. • Dose- 5-15 mcg/kg/min. • Adverse effects- tachyarrhythmias.

  37. Isoproteronol (Isuprel) • Mainly a positive chronotrope. • Increases heart rate and myocardial oxygen consumption. • May worse ischemia.

  38. PDE Inhibitors • Amrinone, Milrinone • Positive ionotrope and vasodilator. • Little effect on heart rate. • Uses- CHF • AE- arrhythmogenic, thrombocytopenia • Milrinone dosing- 50mcg/kg bolus, 0.375-0.5 mcg/kg/min infusion.

  39. Epinephrine • b at very low doses, a at higher doses. • Very potent agent. • Some effects on metabolic rate, inflammation. • Useful in anaphylaxis. • AE- Arrhythmogenic, coronary ischemia, renal vasoconstriction,  metabolic rate.

  40. Norepinephrine (Levophed) • Potent a agent, some b • Vasoconstriction (that tends to spare the brain and heart). • Good agent to SVR in high output shock. • Dose 1-12 mcg/min • Can cause reflex bradycardia (vagal).

  41. Phenylephrine (Neosynephrine) • Strong, pure a agent. • Vasoconstriction with minimal  in heart rate or contractility. • Does not spare the heart or brain. • BP at the expense of perfusion.

  42. Ephedrine • Releases tissue stores of epinephrine. • Longer lasting, less potent than epi. • Used mostly by anesthesiologists. • 5-25 mg IVP.

  43. Vasopressin • Vasoconstrictor that may be useful in septic shock. • Use evolving to parallel hormone replacement therapy. • 0.4 units/min

  44. Nitroglycerine • Venodilator at low doses (<40mcg/min) • Arteriolar dilation at high doses (>200 mcg/min). • Rapid onset, short duration, tolerance. • AE- inhibits platelet aggregation,  ICP, headache.

  45. Nitroprusside (Nipride) • Balanced vasodilator • Rapid onset, short elimination time • Useful in hypertensive emergency, severe CHF, aortic dissection • Accumulates in renal and liver dysfunction. • Toxicity= CN poisoning (decreased CO, lactic acidosis, seizures).

  46. Nitroprusside • Dosing- 0.2- 10 mcg/kg/min • Other AE-  ICP

  47. Labetolol (Normodyne) • a1 and non-selective b blocker. • Dose related decrease in SVR and BP without tachycardia. • Does not ICP • Useful in the treatment of hypertensive emergencies, aortic dissection. • Bolus= 20mg, infusion= 2mg/min.

  48. Types of Shock • Hypovolemic • Cardiogenic • High output

  49. Hypovolemic Shock • Cold and clammy, thready pulse, clear lungs. • GI bleeds, trauma, dehydration. • Treatment-Volume, volume, volume

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